Transpiration: leaves, skin, eyes Evaporation: lakes, seas, oceans, land, raindrops (which cools them), virga Sublimation: from ice
probrably 1 and a half cup of water.Do you mean how much water a tree TRANSPIRES (takes up and evaporates) or how much it keeps inside the tree body?A mature, large Doug fir can consume up to 800 gallons a day if available but will subsist on far less as necessary (Peter Rennie, RPF Consulting Forester and Arborist).
Plants use capillarity to draw water from the soil into their roots. As water evaporates from the leaves, it creates a tension that pulls up more water from the roots through capillary action.
Sweating helps cool the human body through evaporation. When sweat evaporates from the skin's surface, heat is absorbed from the body, which helps lower its temperature. This process helps regulate our internal body temperature and prevent overheating.
Water is carried through a plant by the xylem, a type of vascular tissue. The xylem is responsible for transporting water and nutrients from the roots to the rest of the plant. This process is driven by transpiration, where water evaporates from the leaves, creating a pull that draws water up the plant.
Sweating after drinking room temperature water is a normal bodily response to help regulate your internal temperature. When you drink water, your body works to maintain a stable temperature by releasing sweat, which evaporates and cools you down.
Before precipitation, water from bodies of water and land surfaces evaporates due to heat from the sun, forming water vapor in the atmosphere. Additionally, water transpires from plants through a process called transpiration.
Oceans are the principal source of water.
Water is evaporated from any body of water: oceans, lakes, rivers.
The hydrological cycle creates flow. Water evaporates or transpires into the atmosphere and falls in some form of precipitation at higher elevations. As the water moves across the landscape it forms streams, rivers, lakes, and eventually oceans.
Condensation leads to Evaporation, which leads to Transpiration. When water gathers, it eventually evaporates, or turns into a gas because of heat, and travels across the land until it transpires (falls down) as precipitation. (rain, sleet, or snow)
It goes in to the leaves it transpires
Evaporated water goes in the atmosphere to form clouds.Water is evaporated from seas and oceans.
When boiling water, it evaporates and turns into steam. The amount of water that evaporates depends on factors like temperature and time, but generally, about 10 of the water evaporates when boiling.
The movement of water between biotic and abiotic factors is called the water cycle. In this cycle, water evaporates from bodies of water and transpires from plants, then condenses into clouds, falls back to the Earth as precipitation, and eventually returns to bodies of water or infiltrates the ground. This constant cycling of water helps sustain life on Earth.
Water evaporates faster.
The most water evaporates from seas and oceans.
when water evaporates it condenses and becomes water vapor:)